The reality of unarmed African American women—LBTQ, gender nonconforming and straight—being beaten, profiled, sexually violated and murdered by law enforcement officials with alarming regularity is too often ignored – especially with the focus of police brutality on our males. Like so many African American women, Sandra Bland’s death in 2015, resulting from police brutality was not new news. The national attention it received was, however.

Northeastern University conducted a panel to discuss the topic further titled, “Invisible No More: Black Women and Police Violence,” that looked at criminalization—of African American women and women of color like Two-Spirit, Latinx, Asian, Arab and Middle Eastern women, to name a few—and police violence that sometimes resulted with deadly consequences.

The panel of experts was the following: Andrea Ritchie is an African American lesbian immigrant and a police misconduct attorney and organizer. She’s the author of “Invisible No More: Racial Profiling and Police Brutality Against Women of Color” that has recently come out, and the co-author of “Say Her Name: Resisting Police Violence Against Black Women,” and “Queer (In)Justice: The Criminalization of LGBT People in the United States.”

Simone John is a Boston-based poet, educator, and facilitator. She’s the author of “Testify,” her first full-length book of poems about African Americans impacted by state-sanctioned violence.

Monica James is a black trans woman activist. She is the National Organizer for Black and Pink, and a collective member of Transformative Justice Law Project. Because of maltreatment in prison, in 2014 James become a delegate to testify before the Committee Against Torture (CAT) at Geneva Switzerland. Her work towards the advancement of trans justice, transformative justice, and prison abolition has made her national spokeswoman

Robyn Maynard is a Black feminist author, grassroots community organizer and independent scholar based in Montréal. She’s the author of “Policing Black Lives: State Violence in Canada from Slavery to the Present.”The panel discussed the context around the historic and present-day patterns and paradigms of policing and punishment that stems from centuries of colonialism, slavery, segregation, and immigration. The over-policing of women of color is due to gang violence, the war on drugs, war on terrorism, Islamophobia, poverty, sex trade industry, domestic violence and mental health, to name a few.

Transmisogyny and racism put transgender women of color, in particular, at a high risk of police violence. Less than half of trans women of color report discriminatory policing such as “stop and frisk” and “walking while trans.” Trans women of color who have participated in underground economies have experienced excessive police violence—i.e. 34 percent of Latinx and 53 percent of blacks.

For example, in 2007 James was subjected to excessive police violence. She was viciously attacked by an off-duty police officer in Chicago, arrested, and charged with attempted murder for defending herself. While in prison, James, like many trans women, was misgendered by correctional officers and inmates, sexually assaulted repeatedly and denied access to gender-affirming healthcare.

Shockingly, too, gender-based forms of police violence, such as sexual assault is wildly pervasive, gravely ignored and deliberately underreported. While the nation learned of the rapes of more than a dozen African American women at the hand of now convicted Oklahoma City police officer Daniel Holtzclaw, most incidents like this one enjoy impunity.

The reason many sexual assaults go unreported is that half of the 35 top fifty police departments in the U.S have no policies prohibiting police sexual violence against the public. According to a 2016 investigation by the Buffalo News, a police officer, on average, is caught in an act of sexual misconduct every five days. Ritchie stated, “Those are just the ones who are caught, representing, by all accounts, just the tip of the iceberg of this pervasive yet invisible form of police violence.”